Corrections Policy
Effective June 4, 2026
Aminoscope sources every claim to the primary literature and verifies it before publication. Even with that discipline, errors happen — a misread figure, a citation that has been superseded, a price or label detail that has changed, a broken link to a source. When they do, we want to know, and we fix them openly. Accuracy is the whole point of this site, so corrections are treated as a first-class part of our work, not an embarrassment to be hidden.
1. How to Report an Error
Email editorial@aminoscope.com with the details. The more specific you can be, the faster we can act. Where possible, please include:
- The page URL or article title where you spotted the issue.
- The exact sentence, figure, or citation you believe is wrong.
- What you believe the correct information is, ideally with a primary source (a PubMed link, a DailyMed or FDA label, or the trial publication).
2. How We Handle a Report
We acknowledge substantive reports and investigate them against the primary source of record. If we confirm an error, we correct it promptly. If we conclude the original was right, we will explain our reasoning to you. We apply the same standard to errors we catch ourselves as to those readers report.
3. How Corrections Are Logged and Dated
When we make a substantive correction — one that changes a fact, a figure, a verdict, or a safety statement — we update the content and note the change. Corrections are dated, and the page's last-updated date is revised so the record is transparent. Minor copy fixes (typos, formatting, non-substantive wording) are made without a formal notice. Where a correction materially changes a conclusion, we make that change clear on the page rather than quietly editing it away.
4. Updates vs. Corrections
Because the science evolves and labels and prices change, we also refresh content over time. A routine update reflects new evidence or new information becoming available; a correction fixes something that was inaccurate when published. We treat the two differently, but both are reflected in a page's last-updated date.
5. Related Policies
For how we research and verify in the first place, see our editorial policy and methodology. For our standards on fabrication and accuracy, see our code of conduct.